I've tried to march in the Slayer Pride Parade ...

Joyce ,'Same Time, Same Place'


Spike's Bitches 43: Who am I kidding? I love to brag.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


omnis_audis - Dec 16, 2008 8:31:36 am PST #4703 of 10000
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

I'm not a violent man, but jeez Sparky, I wanna kick that gal's ass. And ya, the "I'm not listening to your horror story of 35 years ago cuz medicine has progressed LEAP YEARS since then" is a good attitude.

Shir, I hope you get your sleep tonight. I'm hoping to be hitting the post office in the next day or so, depending on weather (sorry, I'm not walking on icy walks more than I have to).

Speaking of ice. I woke to find my car covered in 10" of ice. Ok, I exaggerate, who knows how thick it really was, it might as well have been 10". Took me a good 20 min with the car running to scrape that crap off. I get to work, and it starts snowing! SNOWING! Granted, it's only flurries, but still. I thought I was in the south! Warm. Moist. WTF is up with cold, icey, snow crap?! Oh, the best is, I'm trying to figure out why my arm feels like a wet noodle. It took a good 30 minutes to realize I probably wore it out scraping the damn windows. Ya, I'm bitching, but it's good humored bitching. It's not angsty, more astonished.


Barb - Dec 16, 2008 8:33:39 am PST #4704 of 10000
“Not dead yet!”

Oh omnis... did no one tell you that "cold" in the South feels colder than anywhere else because of the humidity?

No lie, 30 degrees in Cleveland felt far more comfortable than 45 in Jax does.


Connie Neil - Dec 16, 2008 8:40:41 am PST #4705 of 10000
brillig

God, I hate chipping ice. Here in Utah, the snow is usually dry, fluffy stuff that brushes off easily, even if there are three inches of it. Idiot drivers, though, seem to forget that three inches of dry fluff compacts to half an inch of ice on the road.

Sometimes I wish the plows wouldn't come through, especially in the parking lots. I call them Zambonis, because all they're doing is scraping off the top layer and clearing off that nice smooth sheet of ice underneath.


Laga - Dec 16, 2008 8:41:37 am PST #4706 of 10000
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

Omnis, when I lived in a winter wonderland I would get the car warming up, then turn on the defrost. First I'd scrape the side windows, by then the rear window defogger would be starting to work and I'd have some purchase to scrape the ice off the rear window. I'd do the windshield last as the defroster would start to work and I could get my scraper up under there and often push big pieces of ice up and off. I also think it's a good idea to invest in a heavy-duty long-handled scraper.


Connie Neil - Dec 16, 2008 8:43:57 am PST #4707 of 10000
brillig

a heavy-duty long-handled scraper

The edge of your credit card isn't going to hack it anymore.


Steph L. - Dec 16, 2008 8:47:14 am PST #4708 of 10000
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

We had the White Death predicted overnight, so yesterday Big!Boss told us not to come in until noon today.

Wake up: no White Death.

Get ready to leave (around 11:30): snow starts to fall.

Drive in to work: fucking INSANITY. In the span of 100 yards on the *highway* (not back roads) I saw 3 cars spin out.

Walk into the office: Big!Boss tells us to go back home.

Drive home: hardly any snowfall.

Now home: no more snowfall.

Kind of a funny overreaction. But, you know, if Big!Boss had decided we should keep the office open, then it really would have been the Snowpocalypse. At least getting sent home right away meant I could swing by the Trader Joe's by my office.

To be fair, there were spots on the way in where I fishtailed something fierce (my car weighs less than a ton, which is lousy in snow and ice), but I was okay. Some people just have no idea how to drive in snow, and that's what I hate -- the drivers, not the snow.


WindSparrow - Dec 16, 2008 9:04:59 am PST #4709 of 10000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

Sparky, sounds like we could lock her in a room with my clueless boss and they would very happily gross each other out for the rest of their lives without noticing that the rest of the world has gone on without them.


Toddson - Dec 16, 2008 9:09:21 am PST #4710 of 10000
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

Re Sparky's clueless person - I've always thought it was kind of mean to tell people with medical situations horror stories. Why get someone all scared and agitated for what might turn out to be nothing. So if a situation comes up that I've gone through, I'll try to reassure people that it doesn't have to be so bad (mamograms, tooth extractions, etc.)


WindSparrow - Dec 16, 2008 9:14:19 am PST #4711 of 10000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

That, Toddson, is because you are a sensitive, intelligent person. Which, obviously, are qualities that Mme. Clueless has yet to acquire.


Fred Pete - Dec 16, 2008 9:15:17 am PST #4712 of 10000
Ann, that's a ferret.

The problem I've had with the "it feels colder in the South because of the humidity" argument is that Southerners can't get their minds around how low Northern temperatures can fall. Nothing -- and I mean nothing -- prepares you for days when the high is 10 below, and the low is 25 below. When you wear a scarf over your face because it's so cold that (white font for TMI) the moisture inside your nose freezes each time you take a breath . You don't see that kind of weather regularly, but I did see it every few winters growing up. And southern Wisconsin isn't the worst part of the U.S. for cold winters.

To be fair, Northerners are just as weak about hot weather. 90 degrees doesn't mean it's too hot to go outside, unless it's so humid that a thunderstorm will probably drive you inside within the hour anyway.